4.3 Article

Increased risk of sensorineural hearing loss in patients with spinal cord injury: a nationwide longitudinal follow-up study

Journal

SPINAL CORD
Volume 59, Issue 11, Pages 1200-1205

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41393-021-00697-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Executive Yuan, Republic of China [MOST 109-2314-B-002-117]

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The study found that patients with spinal cord injury are at a higher risk of developing sensorineural hearing loss compared to those without spinal cord injury, with patients with non-cervical spinal cord injury having a higher risk.
Study design Retrospective cohort study with 10 years follow-up. Objective To compare the risks of sensorineural hearing loss in patients with and without spinal cord injury, based on a nationally representative sample. Setting Taiwan's Longitudinal Health Insurance Database 2005. Method A total of 2006 participants who had been aged between 20 and 69 and who had spinal cord injury as of 2002-06 were enrolled in the spinal cord injury group. The non-spinal cord injury group consisted of 8024 sex- and age-matched, randomly sampled participants without spinal cord injury. Then, their sensorineural hearing loss -cumulative incidence curves were generated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Stratified Cox proportional-hazard regression was employed to estimate the effect of having spinal cord injury on patients' subsequent risk of sensorineural hearing loss. Results During the follow-up, 30 patients in the spinal cord injury group and 87 in the non-spinal cord injury group developed sensorineural hearing loss. As such, the cumulative incidence of sensorineural hearing loss was significantly higher in the spinal cord injury group than the non-spinal cord injury group (2.16 vs. 1.21 per 1000 person-years, p = 0.008). The adjusted hazard ratio of sensorineural hearing loss for the spinal cord injury group was 1.75 times that of the non-spinal cord injury group (95% CI, 1.14-2.68, p = 0.01). The patients with non-cervical SCI appeared to have a higher magnitude of SNHL risk than their cervical SCI counterparts. Conclusion Our study showed that patients with spinal cord injury have an increased risk of developing sensorineural hearing loss.

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